Follow
Matthew Motta
Matthew Motta
Boston University School of Public Health
Verified email at bu.edu - Homepage
Title
Cited by
Cited by
Year
Correlates and disparities of intention to vaccinate against COVID-19
T Callaghan, A Moghtaderi, JA Lueck, P Hotez, U Strych, A Dor, ...
Social science & medicine (1982) 272, 113638, 2021
588*2021
How right-leaning media coverage of COVID-19 facilitated the spread of misinformation in the early stages of the pandemic in the US
M Motta, D Stecula, C Farhart
Canadian Journal of Political Science/Revue canadienne de science politique …, 2020
4182020
Knowing less but presuming more: Dunning-Kruger effects and the endorsement of anti-vaccine policy attitudes
M Motta, T Callaghan, S Sylvester
Social Science & Medicine 211, 274-281, 2018
3432018
The dynamics and political implications of anti-intellectualism in the United States
M Motta
American Politics Research 46 (3), 465-498, 2018
2512018
Encouraging COVID-19 Vaccine Uptake Through Effective Health Communication
M Motta, S Sylvester, T Callaghan, K Lunz-Trujillo
Frontiers in Political Science 3, 1, 2021
1652021
Can a COVID-19 vaccine live up to Americans’ expectations? A conjoint analysis of how vaccine characteristics influence vaccination intentions
M Motta
Social Science & Medicine 272, 113642, 2021
1572021
Parent psychology and the decision to delay childhood vaccination
T Callaghan, M Motta, S Sylvester, K Lunz Trujillo, CC Blackburn
Social Science & Medicine, 2019
1232019
Republicans, not democrats, are more likely to endorse anti-vaccine misinformation
M Motta
American Politics Research 49 (5), 428-438, 2021
942021
The polarizing effect of the March for Science on attitudes toward scientists
M Motta
PS: Political Science & Politics 51 (4), 782-788, 2018
712018
Identifying the prevalence, correlates, and policy consequences of anti-vaccine social identity
M Motta, T Callaghan, S Sylvester, K Lunz-Trujillo
Politics, Groups, and Identities 11 (1), 108-122, 2023
632023
Quantifying the effect of Wakefield et al.(1998) on skepticism about MMR vaccine safety in the US
M Motta, D Stecula
PloS one 16 (8), e0256395, 2021
522021
Correcting misperceptions about the MMR vaccine: Using psychological risk factors to inform targeted communication strategies
K Lunz Trujillo, M Motta, T Callaghan, S Sylvester
Political Research Quarterly 74 (2), 464-478, 2021
472021
The enduring effect of scientific interest on trust in climate scientists in the United States
M Motta
Nature Climate Change 8 (6), 485-488, 2018
472018
The Content and Effect of Political Advertising in U.S. Campaigns
MP Motta, EF Fowler
Oxford Research Encyclopedia of Politics: Political Communication, 1-38, 2016
402016
An Experimental Examination of Measurement Disparities in Public Climate Change Beliefs
M Motta, D Chapman, D Stecula, K Haglin
Climatic Change, 2019
372019
The pervasiveness and policy consequences of medical folk wisdom in the US
M Motta, T Callaghan
Scientific reports 10 (1), 10722, 2020
342020
“Gay” or “homosexual”? The implications of social category labels for the structure of mass attitudes
BA Smith, Z Murib, M Motta, TH Callaghan, M Theys
American Politics Research 46 (2), 336-372, 2018
342018
Imperfect messengers? An analysis of vaccine confidence among primary care physicians
T Callaghan, D Washburn, K Goidel, T Nuzhath, A Spiegelman, J Scobee, ...
Vaccine 40 (18), 2588-2603, 2022
322022
How internet access drives global vaccine skepticism
K Lunz Trujillo, M Motta
International Journal of Public Opinion Research 33 (3), 551-570, 2021
27*2021
Looking for answers: Identifying search behavior and improving knowledge-based data quality in online surveys
MP Motta, TH Callaghan, B Smith
International Journal of Public Opinion Research 29 (4), 575-603, 2017
262017
The system can't perform the operation now. Try again later.
Articles 1–20